2018
DOI: 10.3390/ijms19041146
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Signals of Systemic Immunity in Plants: Progress and Open Questions

Abstract: Systemic acquired resistance (SAR) is a defence mechanism that induces protection against a wide range of pathogens in distant, pathogen-free parts of plants after a primary inoculation. Multiple mobile compounds were identified as putative SAR signals or important factors for influencing movement of SAR signalling elements in Arabidopsis and tobacco. These include compounds with very different chemical structures like lipid transfer protein DIR1 (DEFECTIVE IN INDUCED RESISTANCE1), methyl salicylate (MeSA), de… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(48 citation statements)
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References 117 publications
(213 reference statements)
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“…So far, SAR‐like effects of exogenous NHP and Pip in Arabidopsis have been observed against the hemibiotrophic bacterium P. syringae and the biotrophic oomycete Hpa (Návarová et al ., ; Hartmann et al ., ). Further, the application of Pip also induced resistance of tobacco plants to infection by P. syringae and tobacco mosaic virus (Vogel‐Adghough et al ., ; Ádám et al ., ). In addition, overexpression of a rice homolog of Arabidopsis ALD1 in transgenic rice plants increased immunity to the rice blast fungus M. oryzae (Jung et al ., ).…”
Section: The N‐hydroxypipecolic Acid Biosynthetic Pathway Is Criticalmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…So far, SAR‐like effects of exogenous NHP and Pip in Arabidopsis have been observed against the hemibiotrophic bacterium P. syringae and the biotrophic oomycete Hpa (Návarová et al ., ; Hartmann et al ., ). Further, the application of Pip also induced resistance of tobacco plants to infection by P. syringae and tobacco mosaic virus (Vogel‐Adghough et al ., ; Ádám et al ., ). In addition, overexpression of a rice homolog of Arabidopsis ALD1 in transgenic rice plants increased immunity to the rice blast fungus M. oryzae (Jung et al ., ).…”
Section: The N‐hydroxypipecolic Acid Biosynthetic Pathway Is Criticalmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It is triggered by microbial inoculation of one or a few leaves and confers resistance within the whole foliage to subsequent attack by otherwise virulent pathogens (Shah and Zeier, ). Both plant basal immunity and SAR are regulated by signal‐active metabolites (Berens et al ., ; Ádám et al ., ; Shine et al ., ). Salicylic acid (SA) is a well‐documented defense metabolite required for the effective induction of plant immunity.…”
Section: The N‐hydroxypipecolic Acid Biosynthetic Pathway Is Criticalmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Methyl-SA [61], a methylated form of SA, is produced once the cell has been infected by the pathogen. This volatile SAR-inducing molecule travels to other parts of the plant through the plasmodesmata [62][63][64]. Fu et al (2012) state that when SA is elevated at the area of infection, it will bind to the low-affinity binding receptor NPR3 (Nonexpressor of PR Genes 3) and cause the degeneration of cell-death suppressor NPR1, which subsequently results in HR [65].…”
Section: Plant-induced Immunity: Effector Activated Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resistance inducers can be synthetic substances, components derived from plants or microorganisms, as well as Microbial or Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns (MAMPs or PAMPs) that induce a resistance response in the plant, triggering PTI (PAMP Triggered Immunity) (Ádám et al, 2018;Vidhyasekaran, 2016;Jones and Dangl, 2006). These resistance inducers trigger signaling through hormonal pathways (Salicylic Acid: SA, Jasmonic Acid: JA, and Ethylene: ET), changes in calcium concentrations, ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation, activation of G-proteins, and phosphorylation of Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPKs), among others (REF).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%